Ubuntu

Ubuntu 15.04 (Vivid Vervet) is the next operating system from Canonical and it follows the same six-month development cycle. This means that the upcoming release is set to release in April, more precisely on April 23.

The new Ubuntu Touch operating system is almost ready and it will be soon integrated in a number of devices. The good news is that users can see what the OS works and looks like without having a phone to test it.

Canonical is working on the next generation of Unity for Ubuntu, which is going to arrive by default in a couple of years. Until then, the upcoming Unity 8 is taking some baby steps in becoming a full-fledged desktop environment.

What kind of operating system would you run on your PC? One that hogs resources leaving you with just enough to do your work or one that ‘glides’ over the resources leaving almost everything for you to use?

I would certainly choose the latter. And if I ran a business, where a penny saved is a penny earned, I would be even more conservative about it.

I use Arch Linux with KDE Plasma on my main machine. This combination gives me a fully optimized base OS with a desktop environment (DE) that is known for being the most feature-rich.

However, I am always on the lookout for a DE that can run efficiently on less-powerful (aka less expensive) hardware, with an easy to manage OS.

As you may know, the LXDE developers have started porting their desktop environment to Qt, under the name of LXQt. It uses PCManFM-Qt, a version of PCManFM, re-written in Qt, as the default file manager and Openbox as window manager and has support for Wayland, a new display server developed by Red Hat.

Recently, a Lubuntu image using LXQt as default has been released, to allow the users to test the new desktop environment.

Numerous Linux distributions have stopped providing 32-bit images for their users, but most of those OSes don't have large user bases. It's easy to say that you don't support 32-bit apps and that you won't build 32-bit images when there are not too many users for your operating system, but things change when that distro is Ubuntu.

It might seem like a trivial decision to make for the Ubuntu devs, especially if we take into consideration that the number of users that actually download and install that particular architecture has been dropping in the last few years. Now, less than 20% of users download and install 32-bit Ubuntu images and that number is decreasing with each release, but there are a couple of issues to take into consideration.

Ubuntu Kylin 14.10 Utopic Unicorn is latest release of Ubuntu Kylin based on ubuntu 14.10 that used Unity desktop environment. As official ubuntu flavors it released brings with improved stability along with newly added features which provides better user experience.

According to Official announcement of Ubuntu Kylin 14.10. In this release, Ubuntu Kylin team has improve the system stability and add more new features, which provide you a better user experience. The Linux Kernel is updated to Ubuntu Kernel 3.16.0-17.23 based on 3.16.3 upstream version and Unity is 7.3.1. This release upgrades Ubuntu Kylin Software Center to 1.1.3, Youker Assistant 1.3.1, Youker Weather 2.1.2, Youker Calendar 1.0.0, Youker Fcitx 1.0.0, Sogou IM 1.1.0, Kuaipan 2.0.0 and Wiznote 2.1.12. Meanwhile, we have done lots of optimization and enhancement for you, with new slideshow and new wallpapers from 14.10 Wallpaper Contest!

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